16 the most important part of a watch can't be seen It takes more than springs and wheels and jewels to make a great watch. It takes people. The most vital component of a Wyler watch is the skill of the men who make it. These craftsmen take genuine pride in making Wyler watches, so that a jeweler can take professional pride in selling them. This is the kind of workman- ship you thought disappeared long ago. Men's 18K Gold Self-Winding Date Watch, Water- proof as long as crystal is intact genuine parts used, $185. p.t. Ladies' 14K Gold Diamond Watch$165.p.t. <'! æ} t , , :/' -.'\ ,:- , /., '" ::...:: -:"-. .::.::_. ,._ .':- -- .. "-'-A.{ 3-.. / . it;. " /.: .- $:- :::.1. .... ;.< - >' .. ...w.).IV"" . ler incaflex WYLER WATCH CORPORATION, NEW YORK 10 insane, he roamed the island alone for several months, and was eventually found dead. A more welcoIne arrival was Augustus Earle, a young English artist, who became an involuntary so- journer under circumstances rather dif- ferent from those of most of the stranded transients. In 1824, when a sloop on which he was a passenger called at Tristan to take on water and to barter for potatoes, Earle went ashore to make some sketches, and decided to stay over- night while the Islanders were load- ing the supplies onto the vessel from their longboats. In the morning, just as a longboat crew was preparing to push off with the last load of pota- toes, atop which sat Earle, a severe squall broke, making it impossible for the boat to reach the sloop. The squall soon became a gale of such violence that the sloop's master was obliged to seek the safety of deep water, and sailed away, leavIng Earle stranded. The artist stayed eight months on Tristan, as a house guest of the Glasses, while waiting for another boat to pick him up, and it is clear from a journal he kept during that time that he was impressed with the starkness of the island: Looking out from my abode, no spot in the world can be more desolate. . . . The roar of the sea is almost deafening, and the wind rushing furiously down the perpen- dicular sides of the mountains, \vhich are nearly nine hundred teet high, and are masses of craggy rocks, has the most ex- traordinary and almost supernatural ef- fect. Day after day, during his sojourn on Tristan, Earle scrambled froIn one rocky vantage point to another, look- ing out to sea for deliverance, and he "'\. soon reduced his clothes to tatters, whereupon Glass considerately ran hitn up a new paIr of trousers, Robinson Crusoe style, with a sailcloth front and a back made of dried goatskin, hairy side out. Earle, for his part, made a sketch of Glass in which the subject is shown in a tartan honnet, a loo"e, sInocklike shirt, baggy pants, and a pair of moccasins, placidly smoking a long churchwarden pipe as he leans on a rough wooden fence (fashioned from the spars of wrecked vessels, the artist explains in his journal), with a couple of hens scratching around in the earth nearby. In the background is a low- slung thatch-roofed house that re- sembles the crofters' cottages of the Hebrides, and, indeed, most of the twentieth-century Tristan houses. "The houses, and all around theIn, had an aIr of comfort, cleanliness, and plenty, truly English," Earle PLACE YOUR BETS! . . . and you will with a "Roulette" at your next soiree. Ice bucket with matching green felt. brass-trimmed tray. It's not by chance the wheel really spins. Insulated bucket holds six quarts of ice. For the drinks! Remember? Both for but a few chips. . . . $35 thai . IS . . . . (add $1.50 postage) / 'X , · \ { (', '-. /'''^ /' /.., ...",,,. '--,,". "^', :,\-<.. , ,:;: :q:\" -: r# vi .....*-/' '\.- '" /"^ t='" "" " .... ,. "^ N t<"o<-...- ., ø. .., """"^ # ,. :--- \. ",,)o."^" <* .........>' /.... . . . <-"^ -/'/$/ "\., # '<7"'" h . -->t IiII1d @ ^"" :' " "Ø .::.. . .. . j from: R()SE I RY BOLDEN ST ARMANDS KEY SARASOTA FLORfDA DISTILLED ENGLISH DRY GIN, 100% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS . . :. :.:. .:- 0"' ... . f "' ',",,: , .... ...?" ;: t:.. ; ; o >1 $ .. . :'.. ti . .. ..: ...â "'.J:.: : .. .... j . ^ ,.(. ; . J Ó^ .. H f . ,.$ : ' : p :.1 ; f' f :, 'f '-. <:: : . t;. . . :_ \ , : f. . .. .. -fA>P . . . < '"Aw,. . . J19!>> t/^ ,<; t {,. é It ,I{ '< '>< ' f ., .J t t t $* } .. $ .. . ='.- .' ......:. ..... ... :. $ ' J,. .. :.. ... ..: . :; . .. 'Yf /.. ..^.. . .. <,.0" )' -=. :.. ^ 1<# ,.. . k. "<', < i:: - ''''<:!Y;,. ,. :} .... ; 11,% .. ,.,.: ..' /, -þ $, "IIfIo.. ^ Before you say martini, say Lamplighter Lamplighter Gin is the superior imported gin that makes your martinis glow. Next time, "light the lamp." IT'S BRITISH DRY! c.c .þ. -0 ::::0 o o :n :s:: -0 o ::::0 -i m o co -< :s:: o =" m en en o z Ro ::::0 o co co z 5f> z 9 :z: :< @ :s:: o :::s;: Ro :!J c.c en Cù